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Brain Stem Surgeries

Working in a Tight Space

The brain stem, just as any other part of the brain, is such a crucial piece of your body. There are so many essential bodily functions controlled in the brain stem. This region is situated between the cerebrum above and the spinal cord below. It houses three important parts of the brain, the midbrain, pons and medulla oblongata. It also is the communication center for signals passing through the brain to the rest of the body. Because of this surgery in this area is especially tough. Here's why...

What The Brain Stem Controls

It is not only the relay station for signals to pass from the brain to the body and vice versa but controls the following bodily functions:

Respiration

Blodd Pressure

Heart Rate

Digestion

Arousal and Alertness

It is the origin of many cranial nerves which control taste, facial movements, eye movements, swallowing and bowel movements.

Reasons For Brain Stem Surgeries

The most common reasons for brain stem surgeries are:

Hemorrhage

Basilar artery aneurysm

Arterio venous malformation

Glioma

Cavernous angioma

Acoustic neuroma

Pilocytic astrocytoma

A Delicate Maneuver

As you can imagine, brain stem surgeries are very delicate operations that require a very skilled team doctors and nurses. That's because the brain stem is one of the toughest structures to approach surgically since it's so deeply situated and is enclosed by, the cerebrum on both sides, the cerebellum behind and by the throat in front.

Nevertheless, neurosurgeons have developed many 'routes' to approach the brain stem, each having its own advantages and disadvantages. Different neurosurgeons access brain stem by different ways for treating similar problems depending upon their expertise, preference, selective training, incidence of serious side effects and success rates. These approaches are:

Subtemporal approach

Far lateral approach

Combined supra and infratentorial approach

Anterolateral approach

Transpetrosal approach

Intradural pterional or subtemporal approach

Transfrontal approach

Transcerebellar approach

What to Expect from Brain Stem Surgery

If the brain stem is approached from behind the ear, there could be permanent hearing loss in that ear. Similarly the patient may be left with one-sided weakness of his upper and lower limbs. The facial nerve or other cranial nerves may be affected also, leading to problems like inadequate facial and eye movements, difficulty in eating and drinking, tendency to breath-in food and drink etc.

The patient is often connected to a heart and lung machine and undergoes surgery in a hypothermic state. After recovering from surgery, he/she has to be in ICU with ventilator support electively.

The patient subsequently must complete occupational, physical and speech therapy to regain the full use of his/her body. Recurrent headaches related to the healing processes of the brain may follow surgery.